Optimized grid design for concentrator solar cell
Grid patterns for concentrator solar cells that increase power output are provided. In one aspect, a top contact for a solar cell is provided that includes: bus connectors and metallic fingers attached to the bus connectors, wherein each of the metallic fingers has a base which is connected to one of the bus connectors or to another one of the metallic fingers such that each of the metallic fingers is attached to one of the bus connectors either directly or indirectly via another one of the metallic fingers, and wherein at least one of the metallic fingers has a width that is tapered quadratically along a length of the metallic finger. A solar cell and a method of forming a solar cell top contact are also provided.
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The present invention relates to concentrator solar cells and more particularly, to grid pattern designs for concentrator solar cells that increase power output.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONPhotovoltaic solar cells often include a top contact which consists of a metal grid on top of the light absorbing layers of the device. The design of the grid is such that it must be sufficiently electrically conductive yet permit enough light to pass to the underlying cell. These requirements for conductivity and transparency are often at odds with one another. For instance, a thicker grid design leads to better conductivity but reduced transparency, and vice versa.
At high solar concentrations, the design of a photovoltaic solar cell grid is important for maximum energy conversion efficiency. The current density is very high and appreciable power can be lost in the grid resistance. Conventional grid designs often include a simple symmetrical pattern consisting of a plurality of metallic fingers connected to a common bus which is usually a larger metallic contact at the sides of the cell. For instance, a common linear grid design is to have two parallel bus connectors on opposite sides of the cell and thinner metallic fingers interconnecting the bus connectors in a ladder-like configuration. Another commonly employed design is an inverted square symmetry grid configuration. See, for example, Wen et al., “Optimization of grid design for solar cells,” Journal of Semiconductors, vol. 31, no. 1 (January 2010) (hereinafter “Wen”) (
The charge carriers generated in a solar cell must travel along the metallic fingers of the top grid until they reach the common bus. The further the carriers travel along the grid to reach the bus, the greater the resistive power loss is. With conventional grid designs the loss due to resistance is still undesirably high.
Thus, concentrator solar cell top contact grid designs that maximize both conductivity and transparency would be desirable.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention provides grid pattern designs for concentrator solar cells that increase power output. In one aspect of the invention, a top contact for a solar cell is provided. The top contact includes: bus connectors; and metallic fingers attached to the bus connectors, wherein each of the metallic fingers has a base which is connected to one of the bus connectors or to another one of the metallic fingers such that each of the metallic fingers is attached to one of the bus connectors either directly or indirectly via another one of the metallic fingers, and wherein at least one of the metallic fingers has a width that is tapered quadratically along a length of the metallic finger.
In another aspect of the invention, a solar cell is provided. The solar cell includes: a top contact having bus connectors, and metallic fingers attached to the bus connectors, wherein each of the metallic fingers has a base which is connected to one of the bus connectors or to another one of the metallic fingers such that each of the metallic fingers is attached to one of the bus connectors either directly or indirectly via another one of the metallic fingers, and wherein at least one of the metallic fingers has a width that is tapered quadratically along a length of the metallic finger; a bottom contact; and an optically active material having one or more semiconductors disposed between the top contact and the bottom contact.
In yet another aspect of the invention, a method of forming a top contact for a solar cell is provided. The method includes the steps of: forming a base layer on a surface of the solar cell onto which the contact is to be formed; forming a photoresist mask on the base layer wherein the photoresist mask is patterned with a design of the top contact; and electroplating one or more contact metals on exposed portions of the base layer to form the top contact on the surface of the solar cell, the top contact having bus connectors and metallic fingers wherein the metallic fingers are attached to the bus connectors and wherein each of the metallic fingers has a base which is connected to one of the bus connectors or to another one of the metallic fingers such that each of the metallic fingers is attached to one of the bus connectors either directly or indirectly via another one of the metallic fingers, and wherein at least one of the metallic fingers has a width that is tapered quadratically along a length of the metallic finger.
A more complete understanding of the present invention, as well as further features and advantages of the present invention, will be obtained by reference to the following detailed description and drawings.
Provided herein are concentrator solar cell top contact grid pattern designs which provide increased power output compared to conventional grid patterns for a given cell size, while maximizing transparency. With regard to transparency, as highlighted above the top contact generally consists of a metal grid on top of the light absorbing layers of the device. The metal grid shadows/blocks a portion of the top surface of the device, and thus cuts down the amount of photons received by the semiconductor layers below the grid due to shadowing. The transparency of the device is thus a factor of how much of the top surface is blocked by the metal grid. With regard to transparency, the thinner the grid design the better. However, sufficient electrical conductivity favors a thicker grid design. When the metal grid design is too thin, the losses due to resistance are unacceptably large.
Advantageously, the present techniques optimize the shape of the metal lines of the grid design so that the lines are relatively thicker where they need to carry more current (e.g., at the edges of the cell), and relatively thinner where less current is present (e.g., in the middle of the cell). Specifically, it has been found herein that there is a cumulative effect of current to the edges of the cell (thus requiring larger lines) and in the middle of the cell there is very little current being carried (thus requiring smaller lines).
According to the present techniques, an adaptive width or layout of the top contact grid fingers is employed that contrasts to the uniform width in former grid designs. For the same amount of shadowing that the grid fingers provide, the amount of resistive loss is reduced by a factor on the order of 25% with the present grid design.
For illustrative purposes,
The solar cells described herein generally include an optically active material containing one or more semiconductors sandwiched between two electrodes. By way of example only, the exemplary solar cell 100 depicted in
As shown in
Concentrated Photovoltaic (CPV) systems use lenses and/or mirrors to focus sunlight onto the solar cells. See, for example, U.S. Patent Application Publication Number 2014/0069501 by Alabduljabbar et al., entitled “Cooling System for High Performance Solar Concentrators” (hereinafter “U.S. Patent Application Publication Number 2014/0069501”), the contents of which are incorporated by reference as if fully set forth herein, which describes and depicts a concentrating solar collector that has a collector optic (such as a lens) and an enclosure support. A two-axis drive system is also described in U.S. Patent Application Publication Number 2014/0069501 which permits the photovoltaic system to follow movement of the sun.
Solar cells designed for CPV systems carry large currents on the order of several Amperes. In order to carry these large currents without resistive loss, the electrodes need to be thicker, and the top contact grid tends to obstruct more light than for a simple solar cell. Thus, according to the present techniques, the following parameters for optimization of the top contact grid design are taken into account. First, it is desirable to minimize electrical resistive loss which, as highlighted above, involves increasing the width and height of the top contact grid fingers and reducing the finger spacing. See
As highlighted above, existing solar cell top contact grid geometries include the linear design (straight simple line grid) and the inverted square design. See, for example,
Electrical resistive loss occurs wherever the current (I) finds a resistive path. Several resistive paths exist in a solar cell, including the sheet resistance in the semiconductor under the grid, the contact resistance where semiconductor and the metal grid meet, the resistance of the grid itself, and the bus resistance where grid fingers are joined at the edge of the cell. A primary focus of the present techniques is in reducing the top contact grid resistance (R). The top contact grid resistance contributes a major portion to the overall resistance in a solar cell.
According to an exemplary embodiment, the present techniques involve changing the shape of the top contact grid fingers in a way that increases the electrical conductivity of the fingers with a distance from the center of the solar cell. Namely, the photo-generated electrical current from the solar cell accumulates as it is conducted by the top contact grid from areas near the center of the solar cell to the regions at the edges of the solar cell, where it is collected by the wider metallic bus regions. In a first embodiment, the top contact grid fingers have a tapered design. A first exemplary tapered finger design is depicted in
According to an exemplary embodiment, an even spacing (labeled “Finger spacing”) is employed between the metallic fingers 110b to produce a regular grid pattern on the top of the solar cell. The finger spacing is measured, for example, as the distance from the side of one of the metallic fingers 110b to an adjacent side of the adjacent metallic fingers 110b in the grid. See
It is notable that it is not necessary for the metallic fingers 110b to each taper to a point at the center of the solar cell as shown. For instance, a less aggressive taper may be employed and the metallic fingers 110b may come to a blunt tip at the center of the solar cell (not shown), so long as a tapered design is employed wherein a width of the metallic fingers 110b is greater at the bus connectors than at the center of the solar cell. Further, in the embodiment shown in
In the exemplary embodiment depicted in
As provided above, the finger height does not have to be uniform across the surface of the solar cell. In that regard, a possible variation in the tapered finger design is shown illustrated in
The present quadratically tapered width design resulting in parabolic-shaped grid fingers is further illustrated in
The benefit of the tapered metallic fingers in
wherein I is the photocurrent generated by the cell. By comparison, for the present triangular-shaped fingers, the corresponding loss is:
which is 25% lower than the uniform finger design. A similar reduction of PLoss can be computed between the uniform grid fingers in the inverted square symmetry grid configuration shown in
A number of variants of the present top contact design are provided herein. In other embodiments described below, the shape of the fingers is further optimized, either to facilitate manufacturing, or to further reduce PLoss, especially in cases where illumination is non-uniform which often occurs in concentrator photovoltaic systems.
In the following description and accompanying figures it is assumed that the top contact is present on top of a solar cell in the same manner as shown, for example, in
Another tapered finger design contemplated herein is a triangular-shaped finger design. A triangular-shaped design meets the general requirements herein that the width of the finger at its base is greater than the width of the finger at the center of the solar cell. Several tradeoffs are however made when switching from a parabolic to a triangular-shaped finger design. First, as provided above, the ohmic loss is not constant along the finger, but increases near the base of the finger (I2 increases quadratically, but R decreases linearly only, which makes the product I2R increase as one moves closer to the base of the finger). Thus a parabolic shape is an optimized design. Second, as shown in
In this or in any other embodiments, the metallic fingers can be disconnected (from one another) near the center of the solar cell. Since the photo-generated current can be directed to either side of the solar cell, the amount of effective current in the center regions of the metallic fingers is very small, and hence, the fingers can be removed entirely over a small central region of the solar cell. By way of example only, the size of this central region of the solar cell (from which the metallic fingers can be removed) is on the order of from about 1 to about 3 times the spacing between the metallic fingers.
Another variant of the present optimized top contact design is shown illustrated in
For illustrative purposes only, the following non-limiting definitions are provided to help understand the present teachings. In the above description, reference is made to the length, width, and height of the metallic fingers. By way of example only, in the exemplary embodiments depicted in the figures the length of a metallic finger is often the longest dimension of the metallic finger. The width of a metallic finger is, in top-down view, a dimension of the metallic finger perpendicular to its length. As provided above, the width of the metallic fingers can be varied to give the fingers a tapered design. The height of a metallic finger is, in side view, a dimension of the metallic finger perpendicular to its length. As provided above, the height of the metallic fingers can be uniform, or varied to give the fingers a tapered design. Reference may also be made herein to a ‘base’ of a metallic finger. The base of the metallic finger is the end of the finger attached to a bus connector or another metallic finger (see, e.g., fractal design, described below). It is at its base that the metallic finger has its greatest width. Also, when the height of the finger is tapered (see above) it is at its base that a finger has its greatest height. Conversely, the end of the finger opposite the base is the point at which the metallic finger has its smallest width (and optionally smallest height).
As provided above, other possible variants of the metallic finger design which adhere to the same general tapered configuration are contemplated herein. See, for example,
Thus, for example, in
As a result, the overall width of the metallic finger is decreased moving from the bus connector toward the center of the solar cell. Namely, as depicted in
In the metallic finger configuration shown in
Similar to
As a result, the overall width of the metallic finger is decreased moving from the bus connector toward the center of the solar cell. Namely, as depicted in
Yet another variant of the present top contact grid design is shown in
Specifically, as shown in
Some notable characteristics of the present fractal grid design are as follows: first, the pattern covers a wide portion (or most) of the solar cell surface (i.e., like a regular grid, a fractal pattern can be made to cover the entire surface of the solar cell without leaving big gaps); second, as described above, the pattern replicates itself two (or more) times at a different scale—this gives it the fractal property; third, the pattern is very thin, except in the branches where current accumulates. At each intersection (e.g., a or b in
The present fractal design has notable advantages over a traditional grid design. For instance, charges must travel from the solar cell semiconductor to the nearest finger of the top grid. They must travel through a transparent and poorly conducting film at the top of the semiconductor, typically an Indium Tin Oxide (ITO) film. The fractal shape opens the way to shorten the distance that charges have to travel through the ITO film, because the thinnest branches can be made to cover the area more densely than the traditional grid.
It is notable that, according to the present techniques, the metallic fingers are attached to one of the bus connectors either directly or indirectly via one or more other of the metallic fingers. For instance, in the grid designs described in conjunction with the description of
A number of different techniques may be employed to form the present top contacts on the surface of a solar cell. As provided above, any number of known solar cell configurations may be used in accordance with the present techniques. Thus, it is assumed that the solar cell (upon which the present top contact is formed) is produced using techniques known to those of skill in the art, and therefore the fabrication of the solar cell itself is not described in further detail herein.
According to an exemplary embodiment, the metal deposition is performed using an electroplating process performed in an electrolyte (plating bath). According to this example, in step 902, a thin electroplating base layer is first formed on the surface of the solar cell onto which the top contact is to be formed. Referring briefly back to
In step 904, standard lithography and etching techniques are then used to form a patterned photoresist mask on the base layer. The photoresist mask is patterned with one of the present top contact grid designs. Namely, the pattern formed in the photoresist will contain the design for the bus connectors and the fingers in one of the present top contact designs. The patterned photoresist will act as an electroplating mask. By way of example only, plating of metal will only occur on the surface of the solar cell not covered by the patterned photoresist mask.
In step 906, electroplating in an electrolyte is then used to plate the contact metal(s) onto the exposed portions of the base layer to form the present top contact on the surface of the solar cell. It is notable that, as provided above, it may be desirable to vary the height of the metallic fingers (as well as the width) such that the greatest height is present at the base of the fingers. See, for example,
In step 908, the photoresist can be removed. Techniques for photoresist processing are well known to those skilled in the art, and thus are not described further herein. Finally, in step 910, the base layer is removed from between the plated metallic fingers. By way of example only, the base layer can be removed from between the metallic fingers using a selective wet etching process. Alternatively, a non-selective wet or dry etch can be used. A non-selective etch will etch both the base layer and the metallic fingers. However, based on the thickness difference between the thin base layer and the relatively thicker fingers (exemplary thickness values were provided above), only a minimal amount of etching of the metallic fingers will occur during complete removal of the base layer.
As provided above, embodiments are contemplated herein wherein contact between the individual metallic fingers is not present (i.e., the fingers are in a non-contact position with one another in the center of the solar cell) such that there is a gap between the tips of the metallic fingers. An example of the present top contact grid design wherein the metallic fingers do not contact one another at the center of the solar cell is shown illustrated in
As shown in
As provided above, the present grid designs also include a fractal pattern where one or more of the metallic fingers have a parabolic shape. See
Specifically, as shown in
Although illustrative embodiments of the present invention have been described herein, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to those precise embodiments, and that various other changes and modifications may be made by one skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the invention.
Claims
1. A top contact for a solar cell, comprising:
- bus connectors; and
- metallic fingers attached to the bus connectors, wherein each of the metallic fingers has a base at a first end thereof which is connected to one of the bus connectors or to another one of the metallic fingers such that each of the metallic fingers is attached to one of the bus connectors either directly or indirectly via another one of the metallic fingers and ii) a second end opposite the base, wherein at least one of the metallic fingers has a width and a height that are both tapered quadratically along a length of the metallic finger, and wherein the second end of at least one of the metallic fingers is, at a center of the solar cell, in a non-physical-contact position with the bus connectors and any other of the metallic fingers; wherein the metallic fingers are arranged in a pattern that replicates itself two or more times at a different scale forming a fractal design comprising multiple branches extending out from at least a given one of the metallic fingers whereby the given metallic finger has multiple first branches of the metallic fingers extending out from a side thereof, wherein each of the multiple first branches has multiple second branches of the metallic fingers extending out from a side thereof, and wherein dimensions of the metallic fingers get progressively smaller at each of the multiple branches extending out from the given metallic finger.
2. The top contact of claim 1, wherein at least one of the metallic fingers has a parabolic shape which tapers to a point at the center of the solar cell.
3. The top contact of claim 1, wherein at least one of the metallic fingers has a triangular shape.
4. The top contact of claim 1, wherein for at least one of the metallic fingers a height at the base of the metallic finger is greater than the height at the second end of the metallic finger opposite the base.
5. A solar cell, comprising:
- a top contact comprising bus connectors, and metallic fingers attached to the bus connectors, wherein each of the metallic fingers has a base at a first end thereof which is connected to one of the bus connectors or to another one of the metallic fingers such that each of the metallic fingers is attached to one of the bus connectors either directly or indirectly via another one of the metallic fingers and ii) a second end opposite the base, and wherein at least one of the metallic fingers has a width and a height that are both tapered quadratically along a length of the metallic finger, and wherein the second end of at least one of the metallic fingers is, at a center of the solar cell, in a non-physical-contact position with the bus connectors and any other of the metallic fingers;
- a bottom contact; and
- an optically active material comprising one or more semiconductors disposed between the top contact and the bottom contact.
6. The solar cell of claim 5, wherein at least one of the metallic fingers has a parabolic shape which tapers to a point at the center of the solar cell.
7. The solar cell of claim 5, wherein at least one of the metallic fingers has a triangular shape.
8. The solar cell of claim 5, wherein at least one of the metallic fingers comprises a metallic line having at least a first region at the base of the metallic finger having a uniform width W1 and at least a second region having a uniform width W2, wherein W1>W2.
9. The solar cell of claim 5, wherein at least one of the metallic fingers comprises multiple parallel metallic lines, and wherein a number of the parallel metallic lines varies in different regions of the metallic finger to give the metallic fingers a tapered design such that at least a first region at the base of the metallic finger has a uniform width W1′ and at least a second region has a uniform width W2′, wherein W1′>W2′, and wherein the parallel metallic lines are interconnected by multiple vertical metallic lines at an end of the first region opposite the bus connectors and at an end of the second region opposite the bus connectors, and wherein the vertical metallic lines are perpendicular to the parallel metallic lines.
10. The solar cell of claim 5, wherein for at least one of the metallic fingers a height at the base the metallic finger is greater than the height at the second end of the metallic finger opposite the base.
11. The solar cell of claim 5, wherein the metallic fingers are arranged in a pattern that replicates itself two or more times at a different scale forming a fractal design comprising multiple branches extending out from at least a given one of the metallic fingers whereby the given metallic finger has multiple first branches of the metallic fingers extending out from a side thereof, wherein each of the multiple first branches has multiple second branches of the metallic fingers extending out from a side thereof, and wherein dimensions of the metallic fingers get progressively smaller at each of the multiple branches extending out from the given metallic finger.
12. The solar cell of claim 5, wherein the bus connectors are present on opposing sides of the solar cell, and wherein the metallic fingers extend out from the bus connectors toward the center of the solar cell.
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Type: Grant
Filed: Apr 28, 2015
Date of Patent: Oct 31, 2017
Patent Publication Number: 20160322513
Assignee: International Business Machines Corporation (Armonk, NY)
Inventors: Yves C. Martin (Ossining, NY), Abdelmajid Salhi (Riyadh), Theodore G. van Kessel (Millbrook, NY)
Primary Examiner: Magali P Slawski
Application Number: 14/698,472
International Classification: H01L 31/0224 (20060101); H01L 31/02 (20060101);